| Literature DB >> 26735918 |
Catherine Staton1,2, Joao Vissoci2, Enying Gong2, Nicole Toomey2, Rebeccah Wafula2, Jihad Abdelgadir2, Yi Zhao, Yi Zhou2, Chen Liu2, Fengdi Pei2, Brittany Zick2, Camille D Ratliff2, Claire Rotich2, Nicole Jadue2, Luciano de Andrade3, Megan von Isenburg2, Michael Hocker1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Road traffic injuries (RTIs) are a growing but neglected global health crisis, requiring effective prevention to promote sustainable safety. Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) share a disproportionately high burden with 90% of the world's road traffic deaths, and where RTIs are escalating due to rapid urbanization and motorization. Although several studies have assessed the effectiveness of a specific intervention, no systematic reviews have been conducted summarizing the effectiveness of RTI prevention initiatives specifically performed in LMIC settings; this study will help fill this gap.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26735918 PMCID: PMC4703343 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0144971
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Study flow diagram.
Fig 2Map of the location and type of intervention evaluations included.
Road Traffic (RT) Injury Prevention Study Characteristics.
| Authors | Geographic Region | Prevention Type | Study Design | Targeted Population | Risk of Bias | Outcome Measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abegaz et al., 2014 [ | Ethiopia | Legislation | Interrupted time series | All road users | Low | RTC per 10,000 vehicles,RT deaths per 10,000 vehicles |
| Andreuccetti et al., 2011 [ | Brazil | Legislation | Interrupted time series | Vehicle drivers | Low | RT injuries,RT deaths |
| Bacchieri et al., 2010 [ | Brazil | Education | Non-randomized intervention—Longitudinal with steeped wedge design | Cyclists | Low | Cyclist crashes,Cyclist 'near miss' |
| Bishai et al., 2008 [ | Uganda | Enforcement | Interrupted time series/Cost-Effectiveness | All road users | Low | RT deathsRT crashes |
| Chandran et al., 2014 [ | Mexico | Multifaceted (legislation and education) | Interrupted time series | All road users | Low | RT crashes,RT injuries,RT deaths |
| de Andrade et al., 2008 [ | Brazil | Legislation | Interrupted time series | All road users | Low | RT deaths |
| Espitia-Hardeman et al., 2008 [ | Colombia | Legislation | Interrupted time series | Motorcyclists | Low | RT deaths |
| Farage et al., 2002 [ | Brazil | Legislation | Cross-sectional | All road users | Moderate | TBI cases,RT crashes,RT deaths |
| Gómez-García et al., 2014 [ | Mexico | Legislation | Interrupted time series | All road users | Low | Alcohol RT crashes, Alcohol-related RT injuries |
| Guanche Garcell et al., 2008 [ | Cuba | Enforcement | Cross-sectional/Time-series | Vehicle drivers | High | RT crashes,RT deaths,RT injuries |
| Ichikawa et al., 2003 [ | Thailand | Legislation | Interrupted time series | Motorcyclists | Low | Motorcycle crashes |
| Nadesan-Reddy & Knight, 2013 [ | South Africa | Speed Control | Interrupted time series | All road users | High | Pedestrian/Vehicle RT crashes |
| Passmore et al., 2010 [ | Viet Nam | Legislation | Interrupted time series | All road users | Moderate | Risk for head injuries among RT injuries patients, RT deaths |
| Poli de Figueiredo et al., 2001 [ | Brazil | Legislation | Interrupted time series | All road users | Moderate | RT crashes,RT deaths |
| Rahimi-Movaghar, 2010 [ | Iran | Community | Cross-sectional/Community comparison | All road users | Moderate | RT injuries,RT deaths |
| Salvarani et al., 2008 [ | Brazil | Education | Interrupted time-series | Vehicle drivers | Moderate | RT injuries,RT trauma severity,RT deaths |
| Swaddiwudhipong et al., 1998 [ | Thailand | Education | Community RCT | Motorcyclists | Low | RT injuries |
| Zimmerman et al., 2015 [ | Tanzania | Road Improvement | Non-randomized intervention Longitudinal with steeped wedge design | All road users | Low | RT injury rate |
Intervention description and summary of outcomes.
| Intervention Type | Intervention Description | Summary of Outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Improved road safety policy with laws and higher penalties | Overall RTI reduction range from 1.8% to 33.5% in all road users and 10.5% in motorcycle drivers. | |
| Blood alcohol concentration (BAC) level reduction | ||
| Specifically, head injury reduction of 16% to 33% in motorcyclists. | ||
| Legislation on helmet, seat belt, and cell phone use | ||
| Hospital length of stay reduction of 14.7%. RT-related ER admissions reduced 17.7% to 33% within road users. Alcohol-related death reduction of 5.7%. | ||
| Increase of penalty and application of a scoring system to license withdrawal | ||
| Crash reduction range from 10.5% to 21.3%. | ||
| Death reduction range from 7.2% to 33.2% in all road users. Motorcycle drivers had reports of reduction in 5.7 deaths/month and 7.1% to 16.4% in deaths. Some reports showed non-significant reduction of death in motorcyclists. | ||
| Time trend showing change right after law implementation and monthly rate decrease of 5.1 crashes and 1.96 deaths, with reports of non-significant time trend change in mortality. | ||
| Increase of police enforcement | Death reduction of 17% or 118 lives saved, reduction in crashes and fatal crashes. | |
| Training on technology for enforcement | ||
| No significant reduction to death and injuries, but decrease of 58% in crash frequency. | ||
| Setting target enforcement practices | ||
| Application of the WHO Safe Community model | No significant difference in injury trends or in crashes or alcohol use in motorcycle drivers. | |
| Education for motorcyclists/ bicyclists | Reduction of 21% in RT deaths in all road users. Increase of mild and decrease in moderate (16%) and severe trauma (51%). | |
| Social marketing with mass media and road signs | Injury deaths decrease (23.3%) compared to control communities among all road users. | |
| Education and training using health centers and schools/universities | Reduction of 18.3% in near miss accidents with cyclists and approximately 50% reduction in incidence. | |
| Speed control evaluated by interventions of harder legislation for speed control and insertion of rumble strips (speed bumps) | No significant crash reduction regarding speed legislation. | |
| Rumble strips decreased RT fatalities from 55% to 68%, crashes by 33%, and pedestrian-vehicle collisions by 23%. | ||
| Comparison of a repaved with an unpaved road | RTI significantly higher in intervention compared to the control. |
Fig 3Synthesis of Road Traffic Interventions and Outcomes.